On the choice of your university and how it affects your career [closed]












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I am a bachelor student in mathematics in Switzerland, and this question has been on my mind for a while.

To begin with, how much does the university you're studying at influence your "mathematical skills"? In my country, the bachelors in mathematics are pretty similar, for ETH and EPFL for example. The true difference is the number of students and the professors who might come from MIT and other top universities.
And now, if we compare it to a smaller one, having a ~30 students class for one course with good professors (meaning that they have done great research in their field), isn't a student better prepared thanks to the proximity with the professors, in comparison with a top one having ~400 students? Hence, why should you prefer a better known university over a smaller one?

Surely, when you are doing a Phd you'd want to be near great researchers, but when learning the basis, aren't you better trained in such a smaller university (at least for bachelor)? Or if it is not the case, and you'll be far more better trained in well known university, is your ability to later do research in peril?



On a broader sense : what choice should guide you, when what you want is to contribute as much as possible to mathematics?



Any comments appreciated, feel free to share personal experience, or to speak in a general sense.










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closed as off-topic by Will Jagy, amWhy, John Douma, Paul Frost, user Jan 12 at 23:22


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Seeking personal advice. Questions about choosing a course, academic program, career path, etc. are off-topic. Such questions should be directed to those employed by the institution in question, or other qualified individuals who know your specific circumstances." – Will Jagy, amWhy

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
















  • $begingroup$
    This question might be more appropriate for the Academia SE.
    $endgroup$
    – amd
    Jan 12 at 22:20
















2












$begingroup$


I am a bachelor student in mathematics in Switzerland, and this question has been on my mind for a while.

To begin with, how much does the university you're studying at influence your "mathematical skills"? In my country, the bachelors in mathematics are pretty similar, for ETH and EPFL for example. The true difference is the number of students and the professors who might come from MIT and other top universities.
And now, if we compare it to a smaller one, having a ~30 students class for one course with good professors (meaning that they have done great research in their field), isn't a student better prepared thanks to the proximity with the professors, in comparison with a top one having ~400 students? Hence, why should you prefer a better known university over a smaller one?

Surely, when you are doing a Phd you'd want to be near great researchers, but when learning the basis, aren't you better trained in such a smaller university (at least for bachelor)? Or if it is not the case, and you'll be far more better trained in well known university, is your ability to later do research in peril?



On a broader sense : what choice should guide you, when what you want is to contribute as much as possible to mathematics?



Any comments appreciated, feel free to share personal experience, or to speak in a general sense.










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$



closed as off-topic by Will Jagy, amWhy, John Douma, Paul Frost, user Jan 12 at 23:22


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Seeking personal advice. Questions about choosing a course, academic program, career path, etc. are off-topic. Such questions should be directed to those employed by the institution in question, or other qualified individuals who know your specific circumstances." – Will Jagy, amWhy

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
















  • $begingroup$
    This question might be more appropriate for the Academia SE.
    $endgroup$
    – amd
    Jan 12 at 22:20














2












2








2


2



$begingroup$


I am a bachelor student in mathematics in Switzerland, and this question has been on my mind for a while.

To begin with, how much does the university you're studying at influence your "mathematical skills"? In my country, the bachelors in mathematics are pretty similar, for ETH and EPFL for example. The true difference is the number of students and the professors who might come from MIT and other top universities.
And now, if we compare it to a smaller one, having a ~30 students class for one course with good professors (meaning that they have done great research in their field), isn't a student better prepared thanks to the proximity with the professors, in comparison with a top one having ~400 students? Hence, why should you prefer a better known university over a smaller one?

Surely, when you are doing a Phd you'd want to be near great researchers, but when learning the basis, aren't you better trained in such a smaller university (at least for bachelor)? Or if it is not the case, and you'll be far more better trained in well known university, is your ability to later do research in peril?



On a broader sense : what choice should guide you, when what you want is to contribute as much as possible to mathematics?



Any comments appreciated, feel free to share personal experience, or to speak in a general sense.










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$




I am a bachelor student in mathematics in Switzerland, and this question has been on my mind for a while.

To begin with, how much does the university you're studying at influence your "mathematical skills"? In my country, the bachelors in mathematics are pretty similar, for ETH and EPFL for example. The true difference is the number of students and the professors who might come from MIT and other top universities.
And now, if we compare it to a smaller one, having a ~30 students class for one course with good professors (meaning that they have done great research in their field), isn't a student better prepared thanks to the proximity with the professors, in comparison with a top one having ~400 students? Hence, why should you prefer a better known university over a smaller one?

Surely, when you are doing a Phd you'd want to be near great researchers, but when learning the basis, aren't you better trained in such a smaller university (at least for bachelor)? Or if it is not the case, and you'll be far more better trained in well known university, is your ability to later do research in peril?



On a broader sense : what choice should guide you, when what you want is to contribute as much as possible to mathematics?



Any comments appreciated, feel free to share personal experience, or to speak in a general sense.







soft-question advice






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asked Jan 12 at 22:09









Thomas WernerThomas Werner

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142




closed as off-topic by Will Jagy, amWhy, John Douma, Paul Frost, user Jan 12 at 23:22


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Seeking personal advice. Questions about choosing a course, academic program, career path, etc. are off-topic. Such questions should be directed to those employed by the institution in question, or other qualified individuals who know your specific circumstances." – Will Jagy, amWhy

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.







closed as off-topic by Will Jagy, amWhy, John Douma, Paul Frost, user Jan 12 at 23:22


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Seeking personal advice. Questions about choosing a course, academic program, career path, etc. are off-topic. Such questions should be directed to those employed by the institution in question, or other qualified individuals who know your specific circumstances." – Will Jagy, amWhy

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.












  • $begingroup$
    This question might be more appropriate for the Academia SE.
    $endgroup$
    – amd
    Jan 12 at 22:20


















  • $begingroup$
    This question might be more appropriate for the Academia SE.
    $endgroup$
    – amd
    Jan 12 at 22:20
















$begingroup$
This question might be more appropriate for the Academia SE.
$endgroup$
– amd
Jan 12 at 22:20




$begingroup$
This question might be more appropriate for the Academia SE.
$endgroup$
– amd
Jan 12 at 22:20










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